Author(s)
Douthwaite, RichardKeywords
Adult & Community Education
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http://eprints.maynoothuniversity.ie/329/1/Aded6.pdfAbstract
Why should anyone want to swim against what appears to be the tide of history by attempting to rebuild local economic systems which, over the past century, have been almost entirely swept away? Don't small countries and the regions within larger ones really have no option but to participate in the global economy in a whole-hearted way? This chapter will explore the answers to these questions. Certainly, rebuilding a local economy is not an easy option, but I hope to show that it is one that is definitely worth making the effort to achieve. Few of us would worry about the regions in which we live being entirely absorbed into the global economy if that system was equitable, sustainable, and worked reliably and well. But it is none of these, which is why we need both to develop local alternatives to it and also to attempt its reform. Let's look at each of these three areas in turn to see the extent to which the global economy fails. First, is it equitable?Date
2004Type
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oai:eprints.maynoothuniversity.ie:329http://eprints.maynoothuniversity.ie/329/1/Aded6.pdf
Douthwaite, Richard (2004) Protecting and developing local economies. In: Unsettling the horses: Interogatting adult education. MACE: Maynooth Adult and Community Education, pp. 162-178.